close
close

Press freedom in Hong Kong falls to record low

HONG KONG — In an annual survey released on Tuesday, journalists in Hong Kong rated press freedom in the city as worse than ever, citing fears of sweeping national security laws.

The Press Freedom Index has been published every year since 2013 by the Hong Kong Journalists Association (HKJA) and the Hong Kong Public Opinion Research Institute and rates the city's media landscape on a scale of zero to 100, with 100 being the highest score.

It is based on a survey of over 250 professional journalists and around 1,000 private individuals.

Press freedom in Hong Kong falls to record low

FAR AND AWAY An aerial view of Hong Kong on July 13, 2022. EPA FILE PHOTO

The rating among journalists fell to a record low of 25 this year, down 0.7 points from last year and 17 points since the survey began.

Latest news


delivered to your inbox

Sign up for the Manila Times newsletter

By signing up with an email address, I acknowledge that I have read and agree to the Terms of Service and Privacy Policy.

More than 90 percent of journalists surveyed said press freedom in the city had been “significantly” affected by a new security law passed in March that criminalizes crimes such as espionage and foreign interference.

Colloquially known as Article 23, this is the second law of its kind to be enacted for the financial center. Beijing had already imposed a law in 2020 after massive and sometimes violent pro-democracy protests broke out in Hong Kong.

In addition, 94 percent of journalists said that the prosecution of media magnate Jimmy Lai, founder of the now-defunct Chinese tabloid Apple Daily, under the first law was “extremely damaging” to press freedom.

Further concerns were raised over the disappearance of South China Morning Post reporter Minnie Chan in Beijing.

The HKJA had previously released a statement expressing “grave concern” about Chan, an award-winning journalist who has been unreachable since attending a security forum in Beijing last year.

The public's overall rating was 42.2, largely stable after the last major decline from 45 in 2018 to 41.9 in 2019.

“This discrepancy may be explained by the relatively less heated debate surrounding Article 23 compared to the 2020 National Security Law,” the HKJA said in a statement.

However, journalists are “more aware that their reporting may potentially violate the new criminal offenses under Article 23,” it continues.

The index was released a few weeks after the newly elected chair of the HKJA, Selina Cheng, was fired by the Wall Street Journal upon taking up her new role.

Dow Jones, the Journal's parent company, declined to comment on Cheng's case but said at the time that it “remains a vigorous and vocal defender of press freedom.”